Cover

Contents

About the Book

About the Author

Also by Ian Mortimer

Dedication

Title Page

Introduction

1001–1100: The Eleventh Century

The growth of the Western Church

Peace

The discontinuation of slavery

Structural engineering

1101–1200: The Twelfth Century

Population growth

The expansion of the monastic network

The intellectual renaissance

Medicine

The rule of law

1201–1300: The Thirteenth Century

Commerce

Education

Accountability

Friars

Travel

1301–1400: The Fourteenth Century

The Black Death

Projectile warfare

Nationalism

Vernacular languages

1401–1500: The Fifteenth Century

The age of discovery

Measuring time

Individualism

Realism and Renaissance naturalism

1501–1600: The Sixteenth Century

Printed books and literacy

The Reformation

Firearms

The decline of private violence

The foundation of European empires

1601–1700: The Seventeenth Century

The Scientific Revolution

The Medical Revolution

Settlement of the world

The social contract

Rise of the middle classes

1701–1800: The Eighteenth Century

Transport and communications

The Agricultural Revolution

Enlightenment liberalism

Economic theory

The Industrial Revolution

Political revolution

1801–1900: The Nineteenth Century

Population growth and urbanisation

Transport

Communications

Public health and sanitation

Photography

Social reform

1901–2000: The Twentieth Century

Transport

War

Life expectancy

The media

Electrical and electronic appliances

The invention of the future

Conclusion: Which century saw the most change?

Stability and change

A scale of needs

Social change in relation to the scale of needs

The end of history?

The principal agent of change

Envoi: Why it matters

Appendix: Population estimates

Picture Section

Picture Credits

Notes

Index

Acknowledgements

Copyright

BY THE SAME AUTHOR
AND AVAILABLE FROM VINTAGE

The Greatest Traitor:

The Life of Roger Mortimer,

1st Earl of March,

Ruler of England, 1327–1330

The Perfect King:

The Life of Edward III,

Father of the English Nation

The Fears of Henry IV:

The Life of England’s Self-made King

1415: Henry V’s Year of Glory

The Time Traveller’s Guide to

Medieval England:

A Handbook for Visitors to the

Fourteenth Century

The Time Traveller’s Guide to

Elizabethan England

To my children

and all my descendants.

This is the book I feel I was born to write.

That doesn’t mean it is the book you were born to read –

but it might help.

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Moretonhampstead in Devon. In the Middle Ages the manor was inaccessible to wheeled transport. The incorporation of such places within the Latin world, through the construction of churches, is one of the most significant changes of the eleventh century.

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Exeter Castle, constructed by William the Conqueror in 1068. William found Saxon England undefended by castles and thus relatively easy to conquer. Such fortifications secured a stronger political relationship between leadership and the land.

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Speyer Cathedral, built between 1030 and 1106. A massive construction for its time, its chief purpose was to demonstrate the power of the Holy Roman Emperors at a time when they were losing authority to the pope.

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The late twelfth-century mural from Chaldon Church in Surrey, depicting the judgement and torment of souls. In the twelfth century the doctrine of Purgatory emerged: people started to believe they were not sent directly to Heaven or Hell but could redeem themselves through good works and prayer.

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An Arab physician performing a bleeding, c.1240. Over the course of the twelfth century a large number of medical texts from the ancient world were translated from the Arabic in libraries around the Mediterranean. In Salerno, translations gave rise to an early university specialising in medicine.

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Part of an early thirteenth-century stained glass window in Chartres Cathedral, depicting a wine merchant transporting a barrel of wine in a cart. At this period trade was flourishing across the Continent.

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The Hereford world map, drawn by Richard of Haldingham about 1290. It is a spatial representation of knowledge rather than a true map. Jerusalem lies at the centre, the Red Sea top right, the British Isles bottom left, and the straits of Gibraltar at the bottom. Three quarters of this world – Asia and Africa – lay outside Christendom and were practically unknown to its author.

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A cadaver effigy in Exeter Cathedral. The Black Death forced people to rethink their relationship with God. Many leading figures built reminders of death like this as demonstrations of their earthly humility and awareness of their sinful state.

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The golden rose of Pope John XXII, made by Minucchio da Siena in 1330. Golden roses were mystical gifts given by the pope each year to a deserving prince or lord, or a favoured church. The craftsmanship and delicacy of the rose is a marked contrast to our widespread assumptions about culture on the eve of the Hundred Years War and the Black Death.

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The earliest image of a cannon, from the treatise on kingship written in 1326 by Walter de Milemete for the young Edward III. Edward as a king did more than any other ruler of his age to encourage projectile warfare, including the construction of gun emplacements at his castles in southern England.

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Commonly known as Portrait of a Man in a Turban, this is very probably a self-portrait. Johannes van Eyck dated it 21 October 1433, a year before he painted The Arnolfini Marriage, which openly shows a glass mirror in the background. Glass mirrors are one of the most underrated technological innovations of the Middle Ages, having an impact on everything from visual perspective to individualism.

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A printing press, from a book printed in 1498. In 1620 Francis Bacon declared that printing, along with gunpowder and the compass, had changed the world. By then he was right, but in its early days printing produced lavish books in Latin which few could read and even fewer could afford. It was not until the Bible was printed in the vernacular languages that the change really got under way.

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The late fifteenth-century clock in the chapel at Cotehele House, Cornwall. Over the course of the late Middle Ages, time shifted from a natural, God-given state of reckoning to a secular, machinemeasured one. The hour became the first internationally recognised unit of standardisation.

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Portrait of Columbus by Sebastiano del Piombo. He may have been a brutal tyrant to the people of the West Indies but Columbus’s legacy was of supreme importance in the history of the world, demonstrating the inadequacy of ancient knowledge as well as the wealth of the undiscovered world.

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Map of the world from Abraham Ortelius’s Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (1570). This was the first published map to use Mercator’s projection. Compare it to the Hereford world map of c.1290 and you can see what great strides were made in the discovery and recording of the world in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.

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Before 1500, most guns were enormously cumbersome as well as inaccurate. Extraordinarily rapid advances in firearms technology were made over the course of the sixteenth century: this wheel-lock hunting pistol dates from 1578.

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Printing was not only important for the circulation of written texts, it also was of huge importance in the dissemination of scientific knowledge in visual form. This is a hand-coloured printed (woodcut) image of an iris from Leonhart Fuchs’s De historia stirpium (1542).

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For all those who think of social history as a march of progress, the witchcraft terror of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries carries a salutary message. The prince-bishop of Bamberg designed this building for the systematic imprisonment, torture and burning to death of witches.

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Initially the thinking was that the longer the telescope, the greater the magnification obtainable. This is Johannes Hevelius’s 150-ft-long telescope that he built in Danzig (now Gdansk). It shows the lengths, literally, to which astronomers were prepared to go.

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It was Isaac Newton who demonstrated to astronomers that, when it came to telescopes, size wasn’t everything. Newton’s reflecting telescope, although small, could magnify images 40 times.

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A London opera rehearsal, painted by Marco Ricci in 1708. The gentlemen’s wigs, the paintings on the walls, the assembly of instruments and the very performance of an opera reveal an elegant bourgeois event – something unthinkable in the London of a century earlier.

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Dartmouth today is not what you would call an industrial hub but it was the birthplace of Thomas Newcomen, the man who invented and manufactured the world’s first economically viable steam engine. This example, depicted in 1718, is one of 1,200 machines installed across Europe in the eighteenth century.

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The Tennis Court Oath, after an uncompleted sketch by Jacques-Louis David. On 20 June 1789 all but one of the 577 members of the French National Assembly swore to continue to meet until the constitution of the kingdom was established. It was a seminal moment in the French Revolution – which became a testing ground for revolutionary ideas everywhere.

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Thomas Allom’s 1834 painting of power loom weaving. The Industrial Revolution developed from the need for individual businesses within the same industries to compete with one another. The power loom was invented by Edmund Cartwright in 1785; by the time of this painting there were 100,000 of them operational in Britain alone.

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Advertisement for the Plymouth to London stagecoach covering the 215 miles in 32 hours, from an 1822 local paper. Speeds of travel increased hugely even before the advent of the railways – this journey would have taken five days in 1700. The distribution of information also quickened: before 1700 there were no English newspapers; by 1800 several were being published daily in London, among them the Morning Post, the Morning Chronicle, the Morning Herald and The Times.

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The rights to Louis Daguerre’s method of photography were purchased by the French nation from him and given freely as a gift to the world. Hence ‘daguerreotypes’ became the most common form of photograph until the 1850s. This 1838 image of the Boulevard du Temple, Paris, is reputedly the first photograph of a person: the man having his shoes polished in the foreground and the shoe polisher were stationary for long enough to appear in the ten-minute-long exposure.

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In England, the pre-eminent pioneer photographer was William Fox Talbot. This photograph shows Isambard Brunel’s great ship, the SS Great Britain, being fitted out in Cumberland Basin in 1844. It was the first iron-hulled, screw-propeller-driven steamship, and the largest ship in the world when it was launched in 1843.

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Orville and Wilbur Wright were determined to fly. First they experimented with gliders and then with engines. On 17 December 1902 this picture was taken by one of the witnesses of the first ever flight by a heavier-than-air machine, their Flyer, as it covered 120 feet in 12 seconds.

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Autochrome photograph of a French soldier on lookout duty on the Upper Rhine, taken by Paul Castelnau on 23 June 1917. Photography in many ways undermined the authority of the artist: the realism of a photographic image of war or poverty is much harder to dismiss than a carefully composed painting.

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Dr Nagai, medical instructor and x-ray specialist at Nagasaki Hospital, amid the ruins of the city after the nuclear bombing in August 1945. He died from radiation sickness shortly afterwards. In the twentieth century, war came to affect the whole of society, not just soldiers.

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The Park Row Building, New York. Standing at 119 metres it was the tallest building in the world in 1900.

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At 375 metres, the Petronas Towers – the tallest building in the world in 2000 – stood more than three times the height of the Park Row Building.

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Earthrise, the first photograph of Earth from space and probably the most important photograph ever taken. It was snapped in a flurry of excitement on Christmas Eve 1968 by the crew of Apollo 8, as they were in orbit around the Moon. It provided an objective view of the Earth for the first time – and, disturbingly, it showed our world as a rather small, isolated planet.

About the Book

History’s greatest tour guide is back. And he’s ringing the changes.

In a contest of change, which century from the past millennium would come up trumps? Imagine the Black Death took on the female vote in a pub brawl, or the Industrial Revolution faced the internet in a medieval joust – whose side would you be on?

In this hugely entertaining book, celebrated historian Ian Mortimer takes us on a whirlwind tour of Western history, pitting one century against another in his quest to measure change. We journey from a time when there was a fair chance of your village being burnt to the ground by invaders, and dried human dung was a recommended cure for cancer, to a world in which explorers sailed into the unknown and civilisations came into conflict with each other on an epic scale.

Here is a story of godly scientists, shrewd farmers, cold-hearted entrepreneurs and strong-minded women – a story of discovery, invention, revolution and cataclysmic shifts in perspective.

Bursting with ideas and underscored by a wry sense of humour, this is a journey into the past like no other. Our understanding of change will never be the same again – and the lessons we learn along the way are profound ones for us all.

About the Author

Dr Ian Mortimer is the Sunday Times bestselling author of The Time Traveller’s Guide to Medieval England and The Time Traveller’s Guide to Elizabethan England, as well as four critically acclaimed medieval biographies, and numerous scholarly articles on subjects ranging in date from the twelfth to the twentieth centuries.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 1998. His work on the social history of medicine won the Alexander Prize (2004) and was published by the Royal Historical Society in 2009. He lives with his wife and three children in Moretonhampstead, on the edge of Dartmoor.

Centuries of Change

Which Century Saw the Most Change and Why it Matters to Us

Ian Mortimer

Introduction

Printing, gunpowder and the compass – these three have changed the whole face and state of things throughout the world.

Francis Bacon, Novum Organum (1620)

ONE EVENING TOWARDS the end of 1999, I was at home watching the news on television. After the presenter had delivered the main stories of the day, she started to introduce a résumé of what I thought would be the events of the past twelve months, as usual on such late-December evenings. That year, however, she began a review of the whole twentieth century. ‘As we draw to the end of the century that has seen more change than any other . . .’ she began. I caught those words in my mind, held them there, and started thinking about them. What do we really know about change? I wondered. What makes this presenter so confident that the twentieth century saw more change than, say, the nineteenth, when railways transformed the world? Or the sixteenth, when Copernicus suggested that the Earth rotates around the Sun, and Luther broke the Christian Church in two? Soon black-and-white movies, a mushroom cloud, space rockets, cars and computers began to fill my television screen. The presenter’s statement that the twentieth century had seen more change than any other was clearly based on the assumption that ‘change’ is synonymous with technological development – and that the twentieth century’s innovations were without parallel.

In the years that have passed since that day, I have talked about ‘change’ with a great many people. When asked the question ‘Which century saw the most change?’, almost everyone agrees with the newsreader: surely it is the twentieth. Some people laugh at the very idea that I could even consider it to be any other. When pressed to explain, they usually respond by pointing to one or more of five twentieth-century inventions: flight, the atomic bomb, the Moon landing, the Internet and the mobile phone. They seem to believe that these modern achievements make everything else that went before inferior, and that change in previous centuries was barely noticeable by comparison. This seems to me to be an illusion – in respect of the assumptions that modern achievements represent the most significant changes and that pre-modernity was relatively static. Just because a certain development reached its apogee in the twentieth century does not mean that it was then that it changed at the fastest rate. The illusion is further reinforced by the instinct to prioritise events that we have seen with our own eyes, either in the flesh or on TV, over events that do not have a living witness.

Only a small minority of people immediately see the potential candidature of a century other than the twentieth. This is normally because they have a specialism that makes them acutely aware of the consequences of an earlier technological development – be it the stirrup, the horse-drawn plough, the printing press or the telegraph. I have not kept count, but it would be a fair approximation to say that when I have posed the question ‘Which century saw the most change?’, 95 per cent of people have answered ‘the twentieth century’ for technological reasons; most of the remainder have suggested an earlier century on the strength of a different technological reason; and just a handful of individuals have mentioned a non-technological event prior to 1900, such as the Renaissance or the campaign for the rights of women. As far as I remember, no one has ever suggested a century before 1000, even though one could make a good case for the fifth, which saw the collapse of the western half of the Roman Empire.

Some people reply by asking a question of their own: ‘What do you mean by change?’ On the face of it, it is an obvious response. But it is also a curious one. Everyone knows what change is – an alteration of state. Yet when asked to identify the century that saw the greatest change, people seem to lose their grasp of the meaning of the word. The collective human experience over a long period of time is just too huge in scope for us to think of the myriad changes it incorporates – taken together, all the different factors are unmeasurable. We can calculate certain specific changes across the centuries – life expectancy at birth, reproductive rates, longevity, height, per capita calorific intake, labourers’ average wages – and for a large proportion of the last thousand years we can measure such things as church attendance, levels of violence, relative wealth and literacy; but to measure any one of these things accurately we have to isolate it from all the other aspects of our lives. We cannot measure differences in ways of living. It is like measuring love.

Actually, it is considerably more difficult than measuring love. At least love can be related to a scale – say, from considering sending a Valentine’s Day card to launching a thousand ships to win back your loved one. Lifestyles cannot be related to a scale. Any quantifiable change that might be considered the most significant can be countered by another quantifiable change. For example, the twentieth century certainly saw the greatest growth in expectancy of life at birth: it increased by more than 60 per cent in most European countries. But against this it could be held that individual men and women had much the same potential lifespan in previous centuries. Even in the Middle Ages, some men and women lived to 90 years of age or more. St Gilbert of Sempringham died in 1189 at the age of 106; Sir John de Sully died in 1387 at 105. Very few people today live any longer than that. True, there were comparatively few octogenarians in the Middle Ages – 50 per cent of babies did not even reach adulthood – but in terms of the maximum lifespan possible, there was little change across the whole millennium. As soon as people try to find a measurable fact with which to answer the ‘greatest change’ question, other measurable facts get in the way. Why select one rather than another? As the example of life expectancy as opposed to life potential shows, it is purely a matter of personal preference.

This might suggest that the question is nothing more than a parlour game: a matter of curiosity and amusing debate, along the lines of ‘Who was the greatest king of England?’ But actually it is a serious matter. As I have tried to show in my Time Traveller’s Guides, understanding human society in different periods of time gives us a more profound view of the nature of mankind than the relatively superficial impressions we get by looking at the way we live today. History helps us to see the full range of our capabilities and inabilities as a species; it is not just a nostalgic look back on the way things were. You cannot get the present in perspective without looking at the past. It is only through looking back to the fourteenth century, for example, that we can see how resilient we are in the face of adversities as cataclysmic as the Black Death. It is only through looking back to events such as the Second World War that we can see how innovative, highly organised and productive we can be when faced with a massive crisis. Similarly, looking at the history of Western governments over the last hundred years teaches us how myopic and short-termist we are in today’s Western democracies, in which politicians pander to the whims of society and seek instant solutions to our problems. Only dictators plan for a thousand years. It is history that teaches us how violent, sexist and cruel our own societies have been – and could be again. While historical study has many purposes, from understanding how our modern world has evolved to learning how we entertain ourselves, the most profound purpose of all is to reveal something of the nature of humanity, in all its extremes.

This book is my somewhat belated response to the question implied by that newsreader in December 1999. However, I ought to say that in attempting to determine the century that has seen more change than any other, I have set certain parameters. The first is that I deliberately retain the ambiguous and vague definition of ‘change’ so as to encompass the greatest range of potential developments that might be considered within each century. Only in the Conclusion do I attempt to disentangle and grade them. The second is that I consider just ten centuries: the millennium that constituted the run-up to the year 2000. This is not to deny the importance of earlier periods but rather to keep Western culture in focus. I did not want this book to become yet another list of ‘turning points’ in world history. The third is that the book is about change within Western culture, which is largely a product of the countries that constituted Christendom in the Middle Ages. I only expand the study to a wider context in those centuries in which the inheritors of that Latin-writing world themselves reached beyond the oceans. Thus in this book ‘the West’ is not a geographical unit but an expanding cultural network originally centred on the Christian kingdoms of medieval Europe. Obviously I do not mean to belittle medieval cultures outside Europe – this book is about change, not pre-eminence. If I had considered my question since the birth of Homo sapiens as a species, Africa would have featured heavily. If I had considered it from the end of the last Ice Age, the Middle East would have figured more prominently. If I had attempted to chart all the significant ups and downs of human civilisation, factors such as the use of tools, the control of fire, the inventions of the wheel and the boat, and the development of language and religion would all have been taken into consideration. But these are other histories, and beyond the parameters of this book.

While this book is not a history of the whole world, it is also not a comprehensive history of a set of countries or a region. Many of the greatest events in national histories do not feature here, or are mentioned only in passing. Although certain invasions marked significant national changes – the Norman conquest of England, for example, or the arrival of US Commodore Perry in Tokyo Harbour in 1853 – these were relatively local events. Geographically specific elements can be part of the main story (for instance, the Italian Renaissance and the French Revolution) but most of them are peripheral to my central question. German unification was of little importance to, say, the Portuguese, and the Norman invasion of England was of no great interest to Sicilians, who had a Norman invasion of their own with which to contend. Similarly, the rise of slavery in America and the Caribbean appears only in a subsection of the chapter on the seventeenth century. This is because the resurgence of slavery took place on the periphery of what was then the West. Seventeenth-century Europeans were more directly affected by the less substantial white slave trade, which saw hundreds of thousands of people from Western Europe stolen by Barbary pirates and sold into slavery in North Africa. But even that did not affect Western culture as much as the five major changes selected for that chapter. The resurgence of slavery, like many national battles, should certainly feature in any world history but this book is no such thing. It is a synthesis of thinking about the development of the West in order to answer a specific question.

This focus on the question means that certain individuals and themes are also given less prominence than they usually receive in general history books. Friends and colleagues have asked ‘How can you ignore Leonardo da Vinci?’ and ‘How can you leave out music?’ Although Leonardo was an astonishingly talented man, his technological speculations had almost no impact on anyone in his lifetime. Very few people read his notebooks, nor did they build his inventions. His only important legacy was his painting, but, frankly, I don’t see that my way of life would be very different today if one or two Renaissance painters had not been born. Had no one painted portraits that would be a different matter, but the influence of one individual artist is relatively small compared to the impact of, say, Luther or Copernicus. As for music, it is common in every country and has been so for more than a thousand years. Instruments, tunes and harmonies might have altered in form, and there is a case to be made for the ability to record music being a profound change, but the production of music is one of the great constants in human life, and interesting more for its ubiquity than its ability to alter the way we live.

It seems self-evident that the most important changes are those that go beyond national boundaries, entertainment and spiritual values. The most significant ones have an impact far outside their own fields. A scientist who only affects other scientists is, in the context of this book, comparatively inconsequential; likewise a historian who only influences our ideas about the past, or a great philosopher whose ideas only affect other thinkers. A friend of mine who knows far more about philosophy than I do thought it strange to read a book that pays so much attention to Voltaire and Rousseau but hardly mentions Hume and Kant, whom he considers far more important. But as he readily acknowledged, this is not a history of philosophy. It just so happens that the messages that Voltaire and Rousseau circulated had a direct impact on the political thinking of the eighteenth century. Kant is barely mentioned for much the same reason that Mozart scarcely appears: his legacy did not directly touch on one of the key changes of the last three centuries. The Parisian revolutionaries in 1789 did not storm the Bastille demanding that the nobility obey Kant’s ‘categorical imperative’; their leaders were inspired by Rousseau’s social contract.

In the course of writing this book, I have repeatedly encountered one particular problem. Many of the most important developments in Western culture do not fit neatly within the borders of a single century. So should we consider the development in question when it started or when it had its greatest impact? Do we locate an invention when it was invented or when it became ubiquitous? There is no easy answer to this. On the one hand, it seems obvious that an invention does not change the world until it becomes widely used. Thus the internal combustion engine is described in relation to the twentieth century, not the nineteenth. On the other hand, however, if you only describe a development when its use became common, you ignore its early impact. Most people in the West were unable to read before the nineteenth century, but it would be a grave mistake to ignore the earlier developments in education, particularly those of the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries. Also, if we delay describing some developments until they become ubiquitous, they tend to bunch up, creating the false sense of a sudden surge of change in a later century and an equally artificial sense of stasis in the previous one. To describe the Industrial Revolution wholly as a nineteenth-century phenomenon, for example, would be to diminish the sense of industrial change in the eighteenth. It would also ignore people’s awareness of technological change happening around them, which considerably pre-dated the point at which they themselves started wearing machine-made clothes. Thus a degree of flexibility has been employed. In response to that newsreader’s assertion in 1999, I find it more important that readers understand the wide range of changes that took place over many centuries, rather than setting some arbitrary rules that result in a misrepresentation of the past.

In 2009, I was commissioned to deliver a lecture to celebrate the 1,100th anniversary of the foundation of the diocese of Exeter, in south-west England. I took as my theme the question at the heart of this book: which of the last eleven centuries saw the most change? For that occasion I felt I needed not just to illustrate the various changes that had taken place since AD 909 but also to come to some conclusion. In the course of preparing the talk, a pattern emerged from my study that left me thinking that a certain threshold was passed within the time frame under consideration, and that this would continue to affect humanity for ever. The conclusion of this book has developed that original insight. I believe that if humanity survives another thousand years, the change I have selected as the most profound will be regarded as an archetypal moment in human history – as important as the ancient inventions that formed our culture: language, writing, fire, the boat, the wheel and religion.

Rethinking the question in the years since 2009, and walking through high-shelved corridors and library halls to research this book more thoroughly, I have felt overwhelmed by the scholarship of our society, especially the output of the last 60 years. In one library I was struck motionless by the feeling of never being able to know enough to write a book like this properly. Several centuries have threatened to overwhelm me, towering above me like huge shadows. I faced a wall of books about the Crusades and felt as nameless and insignificant as the people hacked to death in the streets of Jerusalem in 1099. I walked into a room full of books about eighteenth-century France and almost despaired. Any historian who does not retain a degree of humility in confronting so much evidence is deceiving himself, and anyone who does not admit to his or her inadequacy in writing authoritatively about the human past on this scale is a fraud. Of course I would very much like to know everything in order to supply the most thorough and well-informed answer possible to the question I have raised, but there is only so much information the human mind can retain. In my case I have had the advantage of working in the field of English history since my teenage years, first as an amateur, then as a student, an archivist, and finally as a professional historian and writer. As it is English history that I have researched for thirty years, there is an inevitable imbalance in this book in that most of the statistics I quote relate to England, but my choice of changes has not been limited to those that have affected this country. Rather I have selected subjects that affected a major part or all of the West and I have used English facts and figures where they illustrate the practical aspects of a change or to convey a sense of proportion. That seemed better than ignoring my field of expertise in order to even out the geographical imbalance.

It may well be that you do not agree with my choice of the century that saw the most change. It may well be that you remain defiantly convinced that none of the wars, famines, plagues and social revolutions of the past are as significant as being able to use a mobile phone or buy your weekly groceries via the Internet. It does not matter. The aim of this book is to provoke discussion about what we are and what we have done over the course of a thousand years, as well as what we are capable of doing and what is beyond our capabilities, and to estimate what our extraordinary experiences over the last ten centuries mean for the human race. If a few more people discuss such questions, and thereby realise something about human nature over the long term and consider how that insight can be applied to the future, it will have succeeded.

Ian Mortimer

Moretonhampstead, Devon

July 2014

1001–1100

The Eleventh Century

I AM WRITING these words on the top floor of a three-storey house in a small town called Moretonhampstead – or ‘Moreton’ as most people call it here – which is situated on the eastern edge of Dartmoor in Devon, south-west England. It bore the same name, Moreton – ‘the place in the moor’ – in the eleventh century. However, the name and the granite bedrock on which it is built are about the only things that have not changed over the intervening period. One thousand years ago there were no three-storey houses here. There weren’t even any two-storey ones. The dozen or so families resident in the area lived in small rectangular huts of stone and earth. The one room was heated by a central hearth, from which smoke billowed up to the blackened rafters. These houses were cut low into the hills to avoid the weather coming off the moor, and were roofed with thatch of bracken or straw. The inhabitants lived a tough life, eating mainly vegetables, cheese and the hardy grains that they could grow in the acid soil, such as rye, oats and vetches. No one could read or write; there were no priests here, no parish church. There may have been a crudely carved granite font in the house belonging to the king’s bailiff, and a cross where an itinerant preacher would tell stories from the New Testament, but that was all. Although some twenty religious communities are known to have existed in Devon at that time, the nearest two were the bishop’s modest cathedral at Crediton, some 13 miles to the north, and a small monastery in Exeter, 13 miles to the east. Neither of these amounted to much more than a small oratory attended by a handful of priests. The visit of a holy man to Moreton would have been a rare event. So would a feast.

The differences between ways of life then and now are all the more profound when you start to examine the things we take for granted. For example, virtually everything I own was purchased at some point, whether by me, my friends or my family. My predecessor living in Moreton in the year 1001, on the other hand, might never have handled money in his life. It did exist, in the form of silver pennies – King Ethelred the Unready minted considerable numbers of them to pay the invading Danes – but for a householder living in Moreton in 1001 there was little to buy: he had to make most things himself. If he wanted a bowl, he had to carve one out of wood. If he wanted a cloak, he had to obtain wool from local sheep, twist it by hand into thread, weave it into cloth, and finally tailor it. If he wanted to dye his new cloak, he had to prepare the colours from natural plant dyes, such as woad (blue) or madder roots (red). If he had to pay for any of these things, it would be an exchange in kind: he would probably offer animals, skins, meat or eggs – or that bowl he had so laboriously carved. There was simply very little need for cash: most householders only needed it to pay rent to their lord or to acquire something like a cauldron, a knife or an axe that could not be made locally. As a result of this scarcity of coin, hardly any silver hoards from this period have been found in the West Country. Coin production in Europe as a whole was very small, but in Devon it was almost unknown.1

The one place where you would have needed silver pennies was a market town. In the early eleventh century, however, there were only four such places in the whole of Devon: Exeter (13 miles), Totnes (22 miles), Lydford (on the other side of a trackless and boggy moor), and Barnstaple (38 miles). Even travelling the relatively short distance to Exeter, the nearest of these, would have been difficult. It was dangerous for a man to be alone on the forest paths, for he risked being attacked by thieves or even by wolves, which were still roaming wild in England. The trackways were rough and you would have had to ford the River Teign, which in winter had the force to sweep people off their feet. It was also risky to leave your property and family unattended back home, as they might be set upon by outlaws. As a consequence, ordinary people in 1001 did not travel far. The social structures that would require their descendants to journey considerable distances – the courts, Parliament, fairs and networks of religious orders – barely existed. People living in this far-flung corner of Christendom stayed among their own kind, where they felt safe: neighbours and kinsmen were the only people on whom they could depend to protect them and their families, to trade fairly with them, and to help them in times of famine.

In this way we begin to touch upon the real differences between my way of life and that of my predecessors in Moretonhampstead. The human race in 1001 was not just illiterate, superstitious, ignorant of the outside world and devoid of spiritual supervision; it faced continual hardships and dangers. Hunger and deprivation were widespread. Society was violent, and to protect yourself you had to meet force with force. In addition to the home-grown thieves and murderers, Vikings had attacked England intermittently over the last two centuries. In 997 they burnt the small market town of Lydford, on the north-western side of Dartmoor, and destroyed the abbey of Tavistock to the south-west. In 1001 they returned to Devon and attacked and burnt Exeter before turning east (fortunately for Moreton) and destroying the villages of Broadclyst and Pinhoe. But there was no guarantee that they would not return next year, sail up the River Exe to Exeter, and then try their luck to the west. King Ethelred could not have dragged his army along the remnants of Roman roads as far as Devon and through the forest paths to Moreton quickly enough to save the villagers from such attacks, even if he had wanted to do so. If the Vikings were to return, all the villagers could do was gather up their children and run and hide on the barren moor or in the woods.

How representative is this description of other parts of Christendom? As you would expect, there were significant variations even within England. If you travelled the 13 miles over the hills from Moreton to Crediton, you would find a more heavily populated manor, where the bishop of Devon was the lord. In his house you would even discover a couple of manuscript books: one about the early Christian martyrs and the other an encyclopedia compiled by the ninth-century French scholar Hrabanus Maurus. If you left Crediton and travelled into Exeter, you would find merchants and priests living within the old Roman walls. There was a market at the centre of town but still you would have been struck by the agricultural appearance of the place, which was home to fewer than a thousand souls. Winchester, then the capital of England, had a population of about 6,000. London, the largest urban settlement in the kingdom, had more than 10,000, many of whom resided in Lundenwic, or Aldwych, the port to the west of the city. In the south-eastern counties there were more people, more churches, and thus more priests than in Devon. There, coins were more regularly used and markets more common. Kent, for example, had 10 boroughs or places with a market (3.5 per 500 square miles, compared to Devon’s 0.8), with a commensurately greater level of local travel. Even some long-distance journeys were undertaken: London toll regulations refer to traders arriving from Normandy. But although the Viking attacks had not entirely extinguished international trade, their threat was universal. And so was the fear of violence.

Further afield, you would have found even greater variations. Differences in economic prosperity and urban sophistication were to be seen all across Europe. With regard to religion, in 1001 Christendom was on the brink of achieving its familiar pan-European form. Wales, Scotland and Ireland were all independent Christian countries but with violent internal divisions even more marked than those of England. Scandinavia was only partially converted to Christianity, with areas of Norway resisting conversion. In eastern Europe, the kingdom of Poland had become Christian in 966. The kingdom of Lithuania remained pagan, as did the Slavs, but the kingdom of Kiev – lorded over by the Rus, the Vikings who gave their name to Russia – had started to turn to Christianity in 988. The Magyars lived in what is now Hungary. A century earlier, they had pushed into western Europe, fighting their way through the Holy Roman Empire into Burgundy and France, where they continued to raid until 955. In 1001 they too were in the process of being converted to Christianity by the recently crowned King Stephen I, who had defeated his pagan uncle. In the north of Spain, the Christian kingdoms of León (including Castile) and Navarre (including Aragon), and the independent county of Barcelona had started the Reconquista: the fight to recover what is now Spain and Portugal from the Muslim caliphate of Córdoba that would last until the end of the fifteenth century. Thus Christendom was expanding rapidly from its central core into northern, eastern and southern Europe – but not without a daily breaking of the commandment ‘Thou shalt not kill.’

The central core of the Christian world was dominated by the Holy Roman Empire, which stretched from the north coast of Germany all the way south to Rome and included Austria, northern Italy and Lotharingia (comprising the Low Countries, eastern France and the Rhineland). It was governed by the Holy Roman Emperor, who was often the ruler of one of its many constituent duchies, magravates, counties or kingdoms. In his capacity as emperor, however, he was an elected spiritual monarch, chosen by a college of archbishops and secular lords. The empire’s neighbour to the west, the Christian kingdom of France, was ruled by the recently established dynasty of Hugh Capet, but it was only about half the size of modern France. To the south-east there was the independent Christian kingdom of Burgundy, which reached from Auxerre to Switzerland and down to the Mediterranean coast of Provence.

It was in the Mediterranean kingdoms that daily life was most markedly different from England. Córdoba was one of the richest and most sophisticated cities in the world, with levels of trade and learning that outstripped anything to be found in Christendom; perhaps as many as half a million people lived there. The architecture was on a truly splendid scale – as shown by the Great Mosque, which still stands today. It was said that the caliph’s library housed more than 400,000 volumes. In Italy, people were living in towns more or less as they had done in the days of the Roman Empire. It was home to the largest trading settlements in western Christendom: Pavia, Milan and Amalfi each had perhaps 12–15,000 inhabitants, with the maritime states of Venice, Pisa and Genoa following close behind.

The only part of Christendom as wealthy and sophisticated as the caliphate of Córdoba was the Byzantine Empire, in particular its capital city, Constantinople, which was at the height of its prosperity in the early eleventh century. Estimates vary wildly, but its population was probably around 400,000. It also had a highly developed judicial system, economic links across the Middle East, and jaw-dropping wealth. From the Great Palace, the emperor in 1001, Basil II, commanded an area that covered the whole of the north-eastern Mediterranean coast, including southern Italy, most of the Balkans, Greece and Anatolia (modern Turkey) as far as the border with Palestine. He also ruled the Greek islands, Cyprus, Crete and part of the northern coast of the Black Sea. Near the Great Palace was the church of St Sophia, with a massive dome 182 feet in height – it was by far the largest building in Christendom. Works of art had been collected from all over the ancient world by the fourth-century Roman emperor Constantine and placed here to adorn the city he had made his capital. Ancient Greek bronze sculptures stood near Ancient Egyptian obelisks. In 1001, Rome, the original capital of the empire, was insignificant by comparison: its walls surrounded an area only half the size of Constantinople, its artworks had fallen or been stolen, and sheep and cattle now grazed among the ruins on the city’s famous hills. As for the rest of Christendom, the sophisticated Byzantines regarded them as mere barbarians.

Given these extremes – from a handful of self-sufficient farmers struggling to get by in their earth-walled houses on the wet hills of Moreton to the gilded brilliance of Muslim Córdoba and the huge wealth of Christian Constantinople – it might seem impossible to identify developments that changed the whole of the nascent Western world. And yet despite everything that divided them, they had more in common than contemporaries would have realised. When the bishop of Barcelona wished to buy two rare books from a Jew in 1043, he did not pay in silver but with a house and a piece of land, showing that non-monetary purchases might be undertaken even by the educated and prosperous citizens of the Mediterranean region.2 If a famine gripped Europe, everyone suffered – including the Byzantines, who saw high prices and reduced trade. If a disease spread anywhere in Christendom, it killed rich and poor alike. And no one, anywhere, was ever free from the violence of the time. England was conquered by Duke William of Normandy in 1066, and it was another Norman, Robert Guiscard, who occupied the southern Italian possessions of the Byzantine Empire in 1060–8. True to the saying that ‘he who has the most has the most to lose’, the Byzantine emperor, Romanos Diogenes, was captured at the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, and as a result of this defeat, Anatolia was lost to the Seljuk Turks. While he was still a captive, a coup d’état toppled him from power in Constantinople. Later he was blinded, and died of his injuries in a monastery. Frankly, he would have been safer in Moreton.

The growth of the Western Church

There is no doubt that most scholars would identify the rise of the Roman Catholic Church as the single greatest change of the eleventh century. It was a consequence, in part at least, of the states on the periphery of Christendom turning to the Church of Rome. This geographical expansion underpinned the rise of the papacy as a pan-European power, with wide-ranging political and moral authority. It also led to an increase in the power of the Church generally, and thus brought about a series of changes that affected the whole of society. Without this growth, the Middle Ages would not have unfolded in the way they did.

Between 955 and 1100, Western Christendom doubled in size. It was not an instantaneous transformation: many places resisted the Christian faith for decades, but over the period almost the whole of western Europe came to live and worship under the cross. The reasons for this are complex; no doubt missionary zeal played its part, but a more important factor was the desire among rulers either to stabilise their realm against violent neighbours, or to extend their authority by conquering new lands. To do either of these things they needed alliances, and the Catholic Church provided a moral framework within which to establish bonds of trust. And as more princes adopted the Catholic faith, the Church became ever more powerful and attractive – a snowball effect – making the localised pagan religions insignificant. On top of this, rulers saw advantages in adopting a religion that was essentially a dictatorship. The Catholic Church reinforced a monarch’s own authority and, through its hierarchical philosophy, helped him stabilise and control his kingdom.